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The evolution
of the golf ball highlights major changes in the game
of golf and depicts important golf landmarks. The development
of the golf club, the golf course, and the rules of the
game all were affected by this evolution.
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Golf, as we know it, was first played with
a leather-covered ball stuffed with goose or chicken feathers.
Several pieces of stout leather were tightly stitched,
leaving a small opening. The casing was turned inside
out. Feathers - a "gentleman’s top hat full" by measure
- that had been boiled and softened, were tediously stuffed
into the casing before the final stitches were made. The
surprisingly hard feather ball was hammered into roundness
and finally coated with several layers of "paint". Because
of the difficulty and time involved in making Featheries,
they were relatively expensive. This fragile missile was
used for almost four centuries. |
The first "Gutta" ball is believed to
have been made in 1848 by the Rev. Dr. Robert Adams Paterson
from gutta-percha packing material. Gutta-percha is the
evaporated milky juice or latex produced from a tree most
commonly found in Malaysia. It is hard and non-brittle
and becomes soft and impressible at the temperature of
boiling water. Gutta balls, were handmade by rolling the
softened material on a board. The new durability of the
Gutta, together with its much lower cost, resistance to
water, and improved run, provided rejuvenation to the
game of golf. Not without some resistance from traditionalists,
the Gutta gradually replaced the Feathery. |
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The
gutta-percha ball enormously enhanced the game of golf,
however it was soon discovered by golfers who failed to
smooth their balls by boiling and rolling them on a "smoothing
board" after play, that a many "nicked" ball had truer
flight than the smooth gutta. Thus the hand hammered gutta
was created by hammering the softened ball with a sharp
edged hammer ... giving the ball an even pattern that
greatly improved its play. Later, balls formed in iron
molds or ball presses that created patterns or markings
on the ball were introduced. A wide variety of surface
patterns were introduced into golf. |
Surface textures and patterns impressed
into the gutta-percha balls evolved from early imitations
of feathery ball stitching to the highly detailed and
symmetrical that greatly improved the ball’s flight. The
best known balls were the hand-marked private brands of
the Scottish club makers, such as Morris, Robertson, Gourlay,
and the Auchterlonies. Many brands with a variety of patent
names used the bramble pattern (with a surface similar
to the berry). This became the most popular pattern of
the gutta era and was also used on some of the early rubber
balls. |
Few changes in any sport compare with
the changes in the game of golf brought about by the rubber
ball. It was invented in 1898 by a Cleveland, Ohio, golfer,
Coburn Haskell, in association with Bertram Work of the
B. F. Goodrich Company. The ball featured rubber thread
wound around a solid rubber core. Early gutta-percha gave
way to the Balata cover that was developed in the early
1900’s. The popular bramble, mesh, reverse mesh, and a
great many other patterns gradually gave way to the aerodynamically
superior dimple pattern first used in 1908. Because of
the lack of standards, there were many deviations in ball
size and weight. |
On January 1, 1932, standardization of
golf ball weight and size was established by the United
States Golf Assn. following 1930 standards set by the
British Golf Assn. for a slightly smaller ball. The weight
was set at a maximum of 1.620 oz., and diameter not to
be less than 1.680 in. Later. after testing apparatus
was developed to measure velocity, a maximum velocity
of 250 feet per second was added by the USGA. The durability
and precision of today’s ball reflect not only the tremendous
technological advancement of their manufacture but also
the development of space age plastics, silicone, and improved
rubber. |
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